Friday, 16 May 2014

IDAHOT Day 2014

May 17 is IDAHOT Day. Tonight, here in Australia, Brisbane’s
Storey Bridge will be bathed in the light of rainbow colours, as a way the city
burghers have offered to help in the fight against homophobia. If you are a regular
reader of the BGBC Blog, you will know already that I have written two previous
pieces on IDAHOT Day, the first in 2012, where I define homophobia and give an
explanation as to what I believe underpins it. The second piece was a year
later in 2013 where I offered two ways of seeing how homophobia manifests itself.

Brisbane's Storey Bridge 17 May 2014

In 2014, I would just like to bring a few thoughts
together from general LGBTI issues and say something that is pertinent to
IDAHOT Day.

Not A Disappointment

Being gay is often seen as a disappointment. Our parents and
families can be supportive but their friends can silently tut tut to themselves
with, “how disappointing it must be for Mike and Janice with young Tom” or “they
must be so disappointed”. This perpetuates the myth that being gay is an
inferior way to live life. It is not. And homophobia feeds on this sort of
thing and is emboldened by it. “Well if it’s inferior,” says the homophobe, “why
can’t I call him a faggot or beat him up”?

Getty Image - Huff Post

Being gay is not a disappointment. It is not a second best
way to live life, it is not the bronze medal in the life stakes. In fact, quite
the contrary. Being gay is a wonderful way to live life, the equal of being
straight. Gay people are able to flourish and thrive as much as straight
people. We could probably do it a whole lot easier if the world had less
homophobia and heterosexism in it, but the statement stands. Human life in the
Western world is remarkably similar for all
people, straight or gay. I am not for a moment saying that equality of
opportunity is the same for everyone. Poverty, lack of education, lack of
decent health care and prejudice of all kinds all still exist. But those
inequalities notwithstanding, people live, work, get educated, bond with
others, laugh, play, cry, mate, and do remarkably similar things. Despite
cultural and regional differences, growing up in North America, Australia or
Europe in the way people engage with life is relatively similar. Being gay does
not preclude us from living that ‘every person’ life. We gay people can still
live wonderful lives; not the slightest bit disappointing. Until parents,
families, friends, colleagues and society itself can purge this disappointment
notion right away, there will never be true equality. There is no need for any
straight person, be they known to us or unknown, to look at us and feel sorry
for us for being gay. We are not a disappointment.

Not Offensive

One of the most hurtful things that homophobia does is to
declare that gay people are offensive. Some of these people use religious
grounds (and I have dealt with that thoroughly in other posts), while others
don’t use religious language but are just as deeply offended.

Perhaps nothing
has galvanised the Americans or the world of sport in general than ‘the great
kiss’ as I think it should be called (he says facetiously) between Michael Sam
and his boyfriend.

Michael Sam as will most people know is an openly gay black
football player in the United States. Some months ago he publicly came out and
there was much consternation and debate as to whether this disclosure would
injure his career by stopping him from being drafted into the big time – the NFL.
Well, as the world knows now, during the draft, he was at his home, like other
players would have been, with his boyfriend and family, waiting for the phone-call
to see if he made it into the League. Someone had a camera of some sort on him
to record the moment. It was going to be huge if it happened at all. It was going
to be historic. An openly gay man being drafted in front of all of America into
the NFL for the first time. He was intensely emotional. He wept. The
commentators can be heard to say such weeping is common at this time among
players, such is the “raw emotion” of the moment. When the call came in and he
was drafted a place in the St Louis Rams, Sam took the call, physically bent
over and answered the caller through tears. When he straightened up, almost
delirious with happiness and the moment, he hugged and kissed his boyfriend a
few times and was embraced and patted by friends and family. Even for a
non-sports fan like me, it was truly a wonderful moment. That was then.

Over the ensuing days, homophobic America went into
meltdown.

“That kiss was offensive”.

“Why is he shoving it in our faces”?

“I’m not anti-gay, but he doesn’t have to do that in front
of everyone”.

“That should not be allowed to be broadcast – there are
children watching”.

“That’s disgusting”.

“We don’t need filthy faggotts doing this on television”.

“Sick and disgusting I hope they crack him straight when he
gets in the game”.

“Those who throw around that term 'homophobic' ought to
recognize the principle of what goes around comes around. Shall we label male
homosexuals 'women-phobic' and 'vagina-phobic' and lesbians 'men-phobic' and
'penis-phobic.'?"﻿

Now, in any reasonable person’s mind, this kiss was a moment
of extreme happiness, one of those moments where we actually cry with tears of
joy. They are rare in life and are very special. Michael Sam was being held by
his partner as he listened to the phone-call and he hugged and kissed him in
exquisite relief and joyful celebration; just like all the straight
athletes in their homes did with their families, friends, girl-friends or
wives. Is it so far a stretch that we cannot even see this for what it is; a
deeply profound human moment? What it is not is offensive. If a gay man kissing
his boyfriend in such a circumstance is offensive then so is the straight man
kissing his girlfriend. Let’s not have a double standard and let’s call it out
wherever we see it. Human sexuality just is. None of us decide to be straight
or gay, and even if we did, there would still be no excuse for a double
standard; always the test for the presence of prejudice.

The short clip below from a Dallas talk show shows the level
of ignorance, homophobia and heterosexism that still exists. The two middle
women are offended by Sam’s kiss, the one on the left because she doesn’t want
children to see, that it was acted out as ‘news’ (she uses air quotes) as opposed to a real moment of humanity, and
that she doesn’t want it shoved in our faces. The woman on the right earlier
and not in this clip (it is in the longer 6 minute version which is easily
found) is upset at the kiss because it is not American and she is offended.

When you read or view homophobic comments attached to this type of
story, they almost always point to the so-called abnormality of gay sexuality. “Gays
are not normal. That’s why I don’t want my kids seeing that”. Until society
understands what we all understand: that being gay is normal, that it is not a
sickness, a disease, an abnormality or a sign of psychopathology, we will
continue to struggle against homophobic and heterosexist attitudes that will
condemn us and harm young people. So we just need to gird up our loins and keep on keeping on with
educating people and spreading the message that we’re okay and it’s okay to be gay.

Be gay but Don’t BE gay

There is another interesting side to this story. Many
Americans are quite supportive of Michael Sam being drafted, but are at the
same time, uncomfortable with the television network showing him kiss his
boyfriend. Here the homophobia and heterosexism is more insidious. It is covert
homophobia.

“I can accept that you are gay, that’s fine, but please don’t
talk about it. Please don’t demonstrate in any way that you’re gay, like bringing
a same sex partner to a party or wedding. Don’t wear anything that would
suggest you are gay when you are with me. Don’t stick your head up above the
parapet in any way like social activism. Don’t act gay. Don’t kiss your
boyfriend even when you’re really happy and you’ve just achieved something
historic and wonderful”.

This is the homophobia of shame. It can handle that gay
sexuality exists conceptually, but it cannot handle the reality. “I feel shame when I
see such displays. I feel very uncomfortable. But don’t get me wrong, I am
absolutely fine with you being gay”.

Gay people have rightly shed this shame. The whole gay pride
movement grew out of the acknowledgment that we had to not be ashamed of being
who we were. It is sometimes hard. But we need to persevere while ever there is
shame attached to being a LGBT person. We must reject it in ourselves and in we
must reject it in others.

The Unaware Homophobe

One of the most hurtful of homophobic activity is when
people say and declare things that are incredibly hurtful to LGBT people but
they have no idea just how offensive they are being. It happens most often I think
by fundamentalist religious folk who quote chapter and verse of either their
Bibles or their worldview about gay people, whom they always call ‘homosexuals’
and their ‘homosexual lifestyle’ completely obvlivious to the insensitivity of thier language. When you point out that what they are saying
is hurtful, they will often come back and say that they must speak their truth
and that it would be wrong and even unloving if they did not. They cannot see
at all that they are being hurtful or offensive.

What kind of a topsy turvy world do we have when a so-called
follower of Christ can say to me, “Stuart, you will burn in hell for your
faggotty ways. Your love for your partner is not love. It is just lust. And God
will judge you for turning your back on the only way to him thought Jesus
Christ who has shown us the only way to live our lives, which you have rejected”? See how there is some
love theology mixed in with the rest of it which is just hate-speech. It is truly warped and you can find it on any fundamentalist website that discusses LGBT issues including marriage equality. What
person in their right mind would change their life and follow such a person and
accept that person’s values? Homophobia and heterosexism are alive and well in
some quarters of the Christian Church. Such behaviour is as un-Christ-like as I
can possibly think.

Kickback

Today in the world, we see a certain kick back against LGBT
people; a reactionary movement to the gains that LGBT activism has made over
the last two decades. It is happening predominantly not in the West, although there is some, but more in
Africa and countries like Haiti and Brunei. There are still 77 countries I
understand where gay sexuality is illegal and some of them where it is
punishable by imprisonment and even execution. We are lucky and blessed in the
West. We must never rest on our laurels while such injustice, ignorance and
bigotry remains.

Click on the link below for a wonderful interactive website that allows you to analyse all the countries and regions of the world as to where they stand on LGBT issues and how LGBT people are treated. It is well worth a look to keep yourself apprised of the state of the world as it is now.

In so many places in the West, we have come so far. Times have certainly changed and have done so rapidly; so rapidly for some that thier homophobia has been ramped up in reaction. Let us once again this IDAHOT Day remember that those of us
who are open and free about our sexuality stand on the shoulders of giants who
have gone before us to win us these freedoms. Likewise, we must continue to
move in that same direction: to have all people treated equally, to remove historic
discriminations against LGBT people, to advocate for social change like
marriage equality so that we do not have to be categorised as second-class
citizens, to speak against overt and covert homophobia wherever we encounter it,
to speak against nations and movements that would punish LGBT people and harm
them, and to wear with pride, yes gay pride, our difference and our lack of
shame at being who we are as we live our lives authentically.